The commemorations come three days after Liu’s widow, Liu Xia, arrived in Germany following eight years of de facto house arrest in Beijing.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

The hundreds of mourners that gathered in Hong Kong Friday night carried candles in tribute to Liu Xiaobo, as a minute’s silence was held.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

Barrister Wilson Leung, 35, said he admired Liu’s ability to avoid being bitter.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

“He said he had no enemies. He is an amazing and admirable spirit,” Leung said.

A 17-year-old boy from mainland China, disguising himself by wearing a white “V for Vendetta” mask, had come to Hong Kong for the first time especially for the evening vigil.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

“It’s very saddening,” he said. “Liu Xiaobo is from mainland China, but few know about him.”

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

He said he had first learned about Liu after he died and said he had been “inspired” by his philosophy of non-violent resistance.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

Activists led by exiled Chinese dissident Wu’er Kaixi also unveiled a three-part sculpture in a Taipei park on Friday night, which included an etched bronze image of Liu Xiaobo and an empty chair.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

The empty chair became a symbol for Liu after his imprisonment, reflecting his absence from the Nobel Prize ceremony to accept his award in 2010 due to being behind bars.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

Wu’er, who was a student leader at Tiananmen, said Liu had been a key adviser to him during the pro-democracy rallies which ultimately ended in bloodshed when Chinese authorities sent in tanks to crush the peaceful protests.

Lau Siu-Lai. Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

“Liu Xiaobo does not only stand for what he advocated when he was alive. He represented an endeavour that generations of Chinese fought for,” Wu’er told AFP.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

Student Vicky Huang, 15, who attended the memorial described Liu as a “great person”.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

“I’m worried that many people like him are still being persecuted in China,” she told AFP.

Photo: Catherine Lai/HKFP.

House arrest

In mainland China, authorities moved to quash any public commemoration of Liu’s death, muzzling his friends and family with warnings, enforced travel orders and surveillance.

“As far as I know, this year the majority of us [supporters] have been put under house arrest and under guard. At the moment we are all powerless to take action,” said his close friend Ye Du.

“The police are downstairs watching right now,” he told AFP.

Liu’s ashes were scattered at sea — a decision supporters said at the time had been forced upon his family as a way to avoid creating a pilgrimage site where he could be remembered.

Yet even if there had been a tomb to visit, his family would not have been able to go, according to Lu Siqing, who runs the Hong Kong-based website Information Centre for Human Rights and Democracy.

On Friday morning, “public security warned [Liu’s] family members not to go to public places to pay their respects,” he wrote in a statement sent to AFP, citing a conversation with Liu’s sister-in-law Lin Wei.

“So to release Liu Xia was an act to hoodwink the public and pretend to show mercy,” he told reporters.

At the Louvre Museum in Paris, Chinese cartoonist Badiucao organised a performance in which volunteers held up large cloth prints of the Mona Lisa sporting Liu Xia’s glasses and shaved haircut in front of the original painting itself.

Photo: Badiucao.

In Berlin, a large public memorial is planned, to be attended by Liu Xia’s close friend Liao Yiwu — who posted photos of the newly liberated poet grinning incandescently in a backyard garden.

Liu Xiaobo was arrested in late 2008 after co-authoring Charter 08, a widely circulated online petition that called for political reform in the Communist-ruled nation.

The bold manifesto, which was signed by more than 10,000 people after it went online, called for the protection of basic human rights and the reform of China’s one-party system.

Liu Xia had faced no charges but endured heavy restrictions on her movements and was kept under constant surveillance since 2010 when her husband won the Nobel Peace Prize, infuriating Chinese authorities.

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